The Grotesque in Roman Love Elegy
Roman elegy makes frequent use of themes of ugliness and disfigurement, juxtaposing them with images of ideal beauty and sentiment. In order to overcome the obstacles to his erotic relationship, the poet-lover repeatedly represents his rivals and opponents in such a way as to ridicule their appearance and to degrade their social standing. This book explores the theme of corporeal, intellectual, and social degradation from a perspective attentive to the aesthetic significance of the grotesque imagery with which such degradation is accomplished. Although there has been sophisticated discussion of the use of grotesque imagery in genres like comedy, invective, and satire, which are concerned in part with themes of transgression and excess, Mariapia Pietropaolo demonstrates that the grotesque plays a significant role in the self-definition of love elegy, the genre in which it is least expected.
- Introduces the fundamental aspects of grotesque aesthetics and shows their relevance to the genre of love elegy
- Demonstrates that grotesque and refined images constitute the polarities of a dialectic – epistemological and ontological as well as artistic – that is at the core of Roman love elegy
- Uses close readings of well-known poems to reveal hidden complexities in their composition in the light of these new insights
Reviews & endorsements
'… her argument about elegy's reliance on grotesque imagery to undermine and accentuate its idealized portraits emerges organically from within a careful hermeneutics, one as attentive to the blemishes that mark the genre as it is to the elegant surfaces they adorn.' Hunter H. Gardner, Exemplaria Classica
Product details
November 2021Paperback
9781108738644
242 pages
229 × 153 × 13 mm
0.359kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- 1. Premises and Expectations of the Elegiac Grotesque
- 2. Context and Prehistory of the Elegiac Grotesque
- 3. Cynthia and the Grotesque Ethos
- 4. The Ovidian Unmasking of the Elegiac Grotesque
- 5. Revolting and Refined: The Aesthetic Function of Acanthis
- 6. Grotesque Hermeneutics of the Lena in Tibullus and Ovid
- 7. The Rival: A Vir Foedus
- 8. Pasiphae and the Allurement of the Grotesque
- 9. Ovid's Remedia and the Waning of the Elegiac Grotesque
- List of References